Tuesday, October 26, 2021

The Dime Notes - The Dime Notes

Styles: New Orleans jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:31
Size: 115,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:56) 1. Original Jelly Roll Blues
(4:04) 2. Alabamy Bound
(4:36) 3. Aunt Hagar's Children's Blues
(3:05) 4. Black Stick Blues
(5:19) 5. The Pearls
(3:34) 6. 'Tain't Clean
(4:17) 7. Otis Stomp
(6:16) 8. Si Tu Vois Ma Mere
(2:58) 9. The Camel Walk
(4:59) 10. The Crave
(3:39) 11. I Believe In Miracles
(3:16) 12. Ole Miss
(2:52) 13. Turtle Twist
(2:50) 14. What A Dream

The Dime Notes have unearthed a repertoire of stomps, blueses, and forgotten gems of the era from musicians such as Johnny Dodds, Jelly Roll Morton and Red Nichols. Fronted by Chris Barber’s long-time clarinetist David Horniblow, an established figure on the London jazz scene and American pianist Andrew Oliver, a recent arrival to the UK, the band is anchored by the unstoppable pulse of London’s finest rhythm guitarist Dave Kelbie.

The bass chair is occupied by London bassist Louis Thomas, in demand across many genre boundaries with his huge sound and stylistic versatility. The Dime Notes present a fresh take on a timeless style, emphasizing the propulsive grooves and sultry melodies which made early jazz revolutionary, controversial, and wildly popular. https://lejazzetal.com/the-dime-notes/

Personnel: David Horniblow – Clarinet; Andrew Oliver - Piano; Dave Kelbie - Guitar; Louis Thomas - Double Bass

The Dime Notes>

Maxine Sullivan - Moments Like This

Styles: Vocal, Swing
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:57
Size: 165,7 MB
Art: Front

(2:57) 1. Loch Lomond
(2:26) 2. I'm Coming Virginia
(2:42) 3. Annie Laurie
(3:04) 4. Blue Skies
(3:03) 5. Easy To Love
(3:02) 6. The Folks Who Live On The Hill
(2:56) 7. It's Wonderful
(3:05) 8. Moments Like This
(3:15) 9. Please Be Kind
(3:22) 10. Night And Day
(3:03) 11. Say It With A Kiss
(2:39) 12. I'm Happy About The Whole Thing
(2:44) 13. When Your Lover Has Gone
(2:22) 14. My Ideal
(3:06) 15. Everytime We Say Goodbye
(3:07) 16. This Heart Of Mine
(2:49) 17. I'm The Caring Kind
(2:57) 18. Mad About The Boy
(2:51) 19. I Can't Get Started
(2:44) 20. Skylark
(2:51) 21. Come Rain Or Come Shine
(2:07) 22. Taking My Time
(3:00) 23. Summertime
(2:54) 24. Legalize My Name
(2:38) 25. Miss Otis Regrets

Maxine Sullivan had very little formal music training. She was discovered while singing at the Benjamin Harrison Literary Club in Pittsburg by Gladys Mosier. Mosier was, in the mid 1930's, working in Ina Rae Hutton’s big band and an acquaitance of fellow pianist Claude Thornhill. She soon introduced her new find to Thornhill and as his protege', Maxine Sullivan made her first records in June of 1937, accompanied by the pianist's all-star band.

The critics at Metronome magazine received Maxine's first records warmly, giving the discs good ratings and reviews. Around the same time Maxine became the vocalist at The Onyx Club in New York. It was here that she formed both a music and personal partnership with bass-man John Kirby who she soon married. Kirby had worked with Fletcher Henderson in the early 1930’s as well as Henry Red Allen. A busy man in 1937, the stellar bassist recorded with Teddy Wilson, Willie The Lion Smith, Frankie Newton, Midge Williams, Charlie Barnet, and Lionel Hampton all prior to the first records he made with Maxine on August 6th, 1937 which also saw accompaniment from Thornhill on piano. Sullivan and Kirby remained married until 1941.

It was this first session with Kirby that proved to be both a blessing and a curse for Maxine Sullivan. It produced a hit record, a swing version of a Scottish folk song called Loch Lomond. Unfortunately it "typed" her and she depended on similar folk style performances for many subsequent records, despite her ability to adapt to other forms of Pop and jazz songs equally well. Her cool, soft, tone and subtle and intimate style was equally swinging on records like Nice Work If You Can Get It, Blue Skies, St Louis Blues, and Stop Your Breaking My Heart. Unfortunately there were a bevy of records like Darling Nellie Gray, Annie Laurie, Molly Malone and others that began to sound all very similar.

In 1940 Sullivan and Kirby were featured on the radio program Flow Gently Sweet Rhythm. They were the first black jazz stars to have their own weekly radio series. Sullivan and Kirby’s last shows together were in the fall of 1941 and were recorded by two different transcription companies, World and Associated. In the mid 1940s she was recorded with the bands of Teddy Wilson, Benny Carter, and Jimmie Lunceford and can be heard singing mainly ballads with all three groups.

Aside from sessions with Ellis Larkins and Bob Haggart, her recorded output was little until 1955 and 1956. Finally recorded singing better material in the company of musicians like Dick Hyman, and old cohorts Buster Bailey, Charlie Shavers, and Russell Procope; Sullivan produced a series of sides that were her most exciting since her 1937 sessions. In the late 50’s she branched out to new areas of study, in nursing and playing valve trombone, which she played at numerous concerts and festivals in 1958. From 1958 to 1966 nursing took up her career. In ’66 she reemerged playing several festivals with her new husband pianist Cliff Jackson. From then until 1986 she continued to appear at festivals and can be heard with musicians from Doc Cheatham to Scott Hamilton. Her last recorded concert was at The Fujitsu-Concord Jazz festival held in Tokyo in September of 1986.

Maxine Sullivan appeared in the movies St. Louis Blues and Going Places, the latter opposite of Louis Armstrong. On stage, she was seen in Swingin’ The Dream in 1939, and Take A Giant Step in 1953. She toured Great Britain in 1948 and again in 1954. In her later concert appearances she traveled to France for several performances in 1984 and to Sweden many times beginning in 1975 and ending in 1984. Maxine Sullivan died in April of 1987, little more than one month short of her 76th birthday and just 8 months after her last recorded concert appearance. The last song she performed at the Fujitsu – Concord Jazz Festival and her last performance on record…was Loch Lomond. http://www.swingmusic.net/Sullivan_Maxine.html

Moments Like This

The Randy Johnston Trio - Riding the Curve

Styles: Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:09
Size: 133,1 MB
Art: Front

( 6:20)  1. The Song Is Ended
( 8:26)  2. All Through the Night
( 6:12)  3. I Get Along Without You Very Well
( 8:25)  4. High-Heel Sneakers
(10:04)  5. You've Never Been There!
( 5:13)  6. The Park
( 8:08)  7. Wives and Lovers
( 5:18)  8. For Thomas

Recorded on April 30, 1998. Includes liner notes by Bob Blumenthal. Further asserting himself as a premier jazz guitarist, Johnston presents his fifth recording as leader, the second with organist Joey DeFrancesco (the first was In-A-Chord). Idris Muhammad plays the drums with usual aplomb, and tenor saxophone legend Johnny Griffin shows up on two cuts. Johnston does a little bit of everything on this one. There's the midtempo swing of "The Song Is Ended," the funky R&B of "High-Heel Sneakers" (which recalls Jimmy Smith), and the waltzing "Wives and Lovers." On a dangerously slow version of "I Get Along Without You Very Well," Johnston adds some quicker lines. "All Through the Night," featuring Griffin on tenor, is smooth and swift. There are two Johnston originals "The Park" is an easy, no-frills bossa, while "For Thomas" (dedicated to Johnston's old college roommate, the late Thomas Chapin) is a swinging remembrance of more innocent days. 

The longest cut is another piece reminiscent of Jimmy Smith, Griffin's ten-minute-plus "You've Never Been There!" It features a blues groove with tenor sax/guitar unison, an element that Johnston is well-known for. Johnston is an accessible musician whose lyricism is ever-present but rarely flashy. Following in the tradition of legends like Grant Green, Wes Montgomery, and Pat Martino, he proves himself immensely capable on this fine CD, as he continues to grow and mature into one of the best in the business. ~ Michael G. Nastos this trio was formed during a tour of Spain in 1997 - guitarist Johnston, Hammond B-3 player Joey DeFrancesco, drummer Idris Muhammad, as well as special guest saxophonist Johnny Griffin, swing from start to finish Randy Johnston Trio: Randy Johnston (guitar); Joey DeFrancesco (organ); Idris Muhammad (drums). http://www.cduniverse.com/productinfo.asp?pid=1184800&style=music&fulldesc=T

Recording information: Nola Recording Studio (04/30/1998).  Additional personnel: Johnny Griffin (saxophone). 

Jennifer Wrobleski - Jennifer Wrobleski Sings for Harold

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:24
Size: 81,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:31) 1. Love You Madly (feat. Harold Mabern, Joe Farnsworth & Alex Claffy)
(4:04) 2. Heres That Rainy Day
(3:31) 3. Central Park West
(3:28) 4. Red Top (feat. Harold Mabern, Joe Farnsworth & Alex Claffy)
(3:08) 5. Pick Yourself Up (feat. Harold Mabern, Joe Farnsworth & Alex Claffy)
(5:31) 6. The Folks Who Live on a Hill (feat. Harold Mabern, Joe Farnsworth & Alex Claffy)
(4:25) 7. But When the Music Stops (You Always Come Back to Me)
(3:31) 8. Cheek to Cheek
(5:11) 9. Over the Rainbow (feat. Harold Mabern)

Vocalist and painter, Jennifer Wrobleski (formerly Farnsworth) has recently moved to Alpharetta. Born in Pittsburgh, PA, Ms. Wrobleski has lived up and down the east coast. She studied opera at the New England Conservatory of Music and musical theatre at the Boston Conservatory of Music. After school, she began her singing career with The Walt Disney Company in Orlando, FL. As the character, Cinderella, she sang and danced in the Magic Kingdom’s Cinderella Surprise Celebration show. She also played the role of Belle in MGM’s Beauty & The Beast show.

In early 2005, she formed a jazz quartet and performed throughout Florida and Georgia, including Downtown Disney’s Pleasure Island Jazz Company, the House of Blues Orlando, Nikki Beach Miami, Churchill Grounds Atlanta and Sambuca in Buckhead. Later, having moved to NYC, Ms. Farnsworth performed regularly with Harold Mabern Jr, Joseph Farnsworth, Eric Alexander, John Webber, Sharp Radway and Anthony Wonsey. Oftentimes, she was a featured vocalist with the Harold Mabern Jr Trio at the Village Vanguard, Dizzy’s Coca-Cola Club and clubs around the world including Greece,Vienna,Russia and Italy. In addition to the music, Ms. Wrobleski is an avid painter. Her portrait of jazz legend, Harold Mabern Jr is on display at Smalls Jazz Club NYC, a portrait of Teddy Wilson is hanging on the walls at Mezzrow Jazz Club in NYC, as well as a mural at the famed Harlem restaurant, Charlie’s Bar & Kitchen. https://www.jenniferfarnsworthpaintings.com/about

Jennifer Wrobleski Sings for Harold